Status
Conditions
About
Sick or premature neonates are exposed to frequent painful and stressful procedures during their stay in neonatal intensive care units. Although neonates do feel pain and may have long term effects induced by painful experiences, prevention and treatment of neonatal pain is far from optimal in many units. An epidemiological study (EPIPPAIN) conducted in neonatal and pediatric intensive care units in France in 2005 showed that painful procedures were extremely frequent and that analgesics treatments varied a lot among units. Since many guidelines have been issued by international scientific societies to manage neonatal pain, one may expect that the prevention and treatment of neonatal pain has improved over the last 6 years.
Although awake endotracheal intubations are extremely difficult or impossible in older children or adults, such intubations are still frequently performed without sedation/analgesia in neonates. Recent studies have shown that premedications facilitate intubation conditions and greatly improve neonates tolerance of the procedure. Studies aimed at assessing the risks and benefits of different sedations/analgesia strategies are urgently needed in neonates. We also need a tool to assess at the same time the technical conditions of intubations and the tolerance of the neonate to the procedure so that data from different studies can be compared.
The objectives of the present study are:
Full description
STUDY HYPOTHESIS
Principal hypothesis
Secondary hypothesis
LONG-TERM EFFECTS OF PAIN AND ANALGESIC TREATMENTS
This objective will be assessed by matching the data of the current Epippain study and another parallel study (Epipage 2)
Principal hypothesis
Secondary hypothesis
METHODOLOGY
This study will be carried out in neonates cared for in two settings: (i) neonatal or pediatric intensive care units and (ii) the medical regional pediatric transport system (SMUR) In the intensive care units, this study is designed as a prospective observational study to collect around-the-clock bedside data on all painful or stressful procedures performed in neonates admitted to the participating units. All 16 tertiary care centers, Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICUs) and Pediatric Intensive Care Units (PICUs) in the Paris Region will participate. Since this is an observational study no changes in the standard of care will be carried out. During the first 14 days of admission to the participating units, prospective data will be collected on all neonatal procedures causing pain, stress, or discomfort with the corresponding analgesic therapy. A real-time assessment of pain induced by each procedure will be carried out by unit staff using the DAN scale. A detailed record of conditions of endotracheal intubations will also be carried out.
Demographic data, type and duration of respiratory support, sedative and analgesic drugs administered concomitantly or pre-procedure, and conditions related to each procedure (type, hour of the day, operator, parental presence) will be collected. We'll also record repeat procedure attempts for procedures requiring more than one attempt before successful completion. The use of specific pre-procedural analgesia will be noted for each procedure. If neonates are discharged from the units before 14 days, data collection on painful procedures will be stopped on the day of discharge.
In the medical regional pediatric transport system (SMUR), neonates transported during the 2-months study period, will have all their procedures recorded in a specific data collection form. Demographic data, type of respiratory support, sedative and analgesic drugs administered concomitantly or pre-procedure, and conditions related to each procedure (type, hour of the day, operator, parental presence) will be collected. We'll also record repeat procedure attempts for procedures requiring more than one attempt before successful completion. The use of specific pre-procedural analgesia will be noted for each procedure. A real-time assessment of pain induced by each procedure will be carried out by unit staff using the DAN scale. A detailed record of conditions and neonate tolerance of endotracheal intubations will also be carried out.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Intensive care units:
Regional pediatric transport system (SMUR):
Exclusion criteria
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal